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Long COVID: lung pathophysiology and its relationship with cognitive dysfunction

Article: Long COVID: lung pathophysiology and its relationship with cognitive dysfunction

Authors: Keegan R Staab, Marrissa J McIntosh, Abhilash S Kizhakke Puliyakote, Andrew D Hahn, Natally AlArab, Jonathan L Percy, Tara Lanning, Johanna Theeler, Carinda Linkenmeyer, Conner J Wharff, Eric Bruening, Jessica C Sieren, Eric A Hoffman, Alejandro P Comellas, Karin F Hoth, Sean B Fain

Journal: Sci Rep. 2025 Nov 24;15(1):42595

Abstract:
Post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 (Long COVID) includes physical and cognitive symptoms that can last long after acute infection. Links between lung pathophysiology and cognitive dysfunction in Long COVID remain largely unexplored. Long COVID participants were recruited from a post-COVID-19 clinic. Participants completed Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) symptom questionnaires for Sleep Disturbance, Anxiety, Depression, and Cognitive Function, the National Institute of Health Toolbox Cognition Battery (NIHTB-CB), pulmonary function tests (spirometry, diffusion capacity of the lung), structural and functional brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and 129Xe MRI for ventilation and regional pulmonary gas exchange evaluation, at the same study visit. Bivariate relationships between lung and cognitive function in Long COVID were assessed using Spearman partial correlations, adjusted for age. Twelve participants (age = 54 ± 11 yrs.; 10 females) that were 32 ± 5 months from infection were evaluated. PROMIS symptom scores indicated reduced perceived cognitive function in everyday life along with increased fatigue, anxiety, depressive symptoms, and sleep disturbance. However, objective cognitive function performance on NIHTB-CB were broadly within normal limits. Lower 129Xe MRI gas exchange was correlated with more severe symptoms of sleep disturbance, reduced executive functioning performance, and elevated cerebral perfusion via brain MRI. These results are suggestive of a link between lung pathophysiology and cognitive dysfunction in this Long COVID population with enduring respiratory and cognitive symptoms more than two years after infection.

Link to journal online: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-025-26568-y

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